News Release

Grammy Award-Winning Artist Stars in New Commercial Directed by Spike Lee Premieres During MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, August 28

PURCHASE, N.Y., Aug 25, 2005 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- Kanye West not only will
be featured as a performer and nominee at the MTV Video Music Awards on
Sunday, August 28, he also will appear in a new Pepsi commercial, which debuts
during the telecast.

The commercial, titled "Timeline," follows Kanye as he walks by iconic
backdrops of various cities, including Paris, Cairo, Tokyo, and Chicago, via
state-of-the-art computer graphics and special effects. Set to the song
"Heard 'Em Say" (featuring Adam Levine of Maroon 5) from his new album "Late
Registration," Kanye and his "aura" (fueled by Pepsi) have a major influence
on every city he visits. The 30-second spot was directed by Spike Lee and
created by Spike DDB.

"From concept, to execution, to post-production and effects, to revisions
-- a lot of work went into this creative process," said Kanye West, who is
managed by Gee Roberson of Hip Hop Since 1978 Management and is signed to
Jay-Z's Roc-A-Fella Rec record label. "I want to thank Pepsi for working
overtime to see this through."

The "Timeline" commercial is a part of Kanye's new partnership with Pepsi.
On August 13, the artist headlined an exclusive Pepsi Smash concert in Miami.
Performance footage of Kanye from the concert is currently featured on Pepsi's
music microsite on Yahoo! (www.smash.yahoo.com), which launched in June and
includes original video programming from a variety of musical artists. Las
Vegas-based MEGA, INC., Pepsi's music marketing agency, facilitated the
partnership with Kanye.

Pepsi has a long history in music and has featured the biggest recording
artists and a diverse range of chart-topping music in marketing campaigns.
Recent campaigns have featured superstars Beyonce, Gwen Stefani and P. Diddy.
The commercial starring Stefani helped launch the Pepsi iTunes promotion in
which 200 million free songs were made available to consumers.